Failure to Perform Daily Temperature Monitoring of Residents’ Personal Refrigerators
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to implement its policy for monitoring and documenting temperatures of residents’ personal in-room refrigerators and freezers used to store food and beverages brought in by families and visitors. The written policy, dated 01/01/2025, required that a temperature monitoring log be maintained, that a designated staff member document refrigerator temperatures daily, and that a thermometer be kept in the refrigerator to maintain a temperature of 41 degrees or below. Surveyors found that temperature checks were not being performed and documented daily as required, despite residents having personal refrigerators containing perishable items. For one resident with COPD, deep vein thrombosis, schizophrenia, and depression, who had intact cognition with a BIMS score of 13, observation showed a personal refrigerator containing a gallon of milk with a valid expiration date. The temperature log taped to the side of the refrigerator showed entries only on four dates, rather than daily, and all recorded temperatures were 32 degrees. The thermometer inside the unit read 32 degrees in the refrigerator and 22 degrees in the freezer at the time of observation, which were within acceptable parameters, but the monitoring was not done every day. The resident stated he did not know who checked the thermometer and did not recall having spoiled food. For another resident with cervical disc degeneration, cerebral infarction, aphasia, hypertension, and chronic kidney disease, and a BIMS score of 3 indicating severe cognitive impairment, observation revealed a personal refrigerator with three pints of ice cream in the freezer, all with future expiration dates. The temperature log showed checks on only three dates, with refrigerator and freezer temperatures within acceptable ranges, but again not documented daily. A third resident with diabetes type II, unspecified chronic bronchitis, and spinal cord disease, and intact cognition with a BIMS score of 15, had a personal refrigerator log with missing temperature entries for two consecutive days, indicating temperatures were not obtained daily. This resident reported that staff did not always keep up with temperature checks, though they looked at the refrigerator daily. Interviews with the DON, Housekeeping Supervisor, and Administrator confirmed that nursing staff were not responsible for monitoring these temperatures, that housekeeping had not been clearly informed of this responsibility until after the survey date, and that the Ambassador Round sheet used by staff did not direct them to check refrigerator and freezer temperatures, resulting in the failure to carry out the facility’s policy.
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